A Doll’s House was not Henrik Ibsen’s first play, but the one that brought him glory and made of him a world famous playwright. The play was a controversial issue that made critics attack its writer who presented them with Nora, a wife fighting to gain her independence, freedom and equality to men. Ibsen made his character grant herself the right to participate in bearing financial burdens with her husband; she would borrow and be indebted to save her husband’s life; she would leave her matrimonial home turning her back to this husband who did not appreciate her favor, clapping the door behind after she had realized that his house was only a “Doll’s House” and she was only a doll owned by her husband Torfald Helmer.